2019: Difference between revisions

From Bhamwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Line 80: Line 80:
* May: [[Station 31 Kitchen]] opened at 104 [[Chesser Drive]] in [[Chelsea]].
* May: [[Station 31 Kitchen]] opened at 104 [[Chesser Drive]] in [[Chelsea]].
* July: The Mississippi Lime Co. of St Louis, Missouri acquired [[Southern Lime]] in [[Calera]] from the Covia Holdings Corporation of Independence, Ohio.
* July: The Mississippi Lime Co. of St Louis, Missouri acquired [[Southern Lime]] in [[Calera]] from the Covia Holdings Corporation of Independence, Ohio.
* Summer: [[Billy Reid]] opened a retail boutique at [[Pepper Place]].
* Summer: [[Dread River Distilling Company]] opened on [[7th Avenue South]].
* Summer: [[Dread River Distilling Company]] opened on [[7th Avenue South]].
* October: [[Bobby Carl's Table]] opened on [[Cahaba Road]] in [[English Village]].
* October: [[Bobby Carl's Table]] opened on [[Cahaba Road]] in [[English Village]].
* [[October 5]]: [[Matthew Zauchin|Matthew]] and [[Lauren Zauchin]] opened [[Village Drug Co.]] at the [[Dunnavant Square Shopping Center]] in [[Mt Laurel]].
* [[October 5]]: [[Matthew Zauchin|Matthew]] and [[Lauren Zauchin]] opened [[Village Drug Co.]] at the [[Dunnavant Square Shopping Center]] in [[Mt Laurel]].
* [[October 11]]: [[Billy Reid]] opened a retail boutique at [[Pepper Place]].
* [[November 1]]: The [[Magic City ePLEX]] esports arena opened at the [[Crestwood Festival Center]].
* [[November 1]]: The [[Magic City ePLEX]] esports arena opened at the [[Crestwood Festival Center]].



Revision as of 15:50, 10 October 2019

2019 is the 148th year after the founding of the City of Birmingham.

Events

Business

Establishments

Disestablishments

Education

Government

Religion

Sports

The Birmingham Iron played their sole season in 2019.

Individuals

Births

Awards

Graduations

Marriages

Retirements

Deaths

Larry Langford
Art Clarkson
Gip Gipson

Works

Books

Buildings

Demolitions

Context

In 2019, the Cathedral of Notre-Dame in Paris was grievously damaged by fire. Massive wildfires raged across arctic areas. A feud between President Trump and Congress over the Mexican border wall led to the then-longest ever federal government shutdown. White supremacist mass shooters killed dozens of people at a Wal-Mart in El Paso, Texas and at a mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand. A Global Climate Strike was held on September 20.

Notable deaths in 2019 included those of actors Diahann Carroll, Carol Channing, Tim Conway, Doris Day, Albert Finney, Peter Fonda, Peter Mayhew, Luke Perry, Rutger Hauer and Rip Torn; architects Phil Freelon, Florence Knoll, I. M. Pei and Stanley Tigerman; baseball manager Frank Robinson; composers Michel Legrand and André Previn; director John Singleton; former Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi; former Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe; fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld; industrialists David Koch and T. Boone Pickens; journalist Cokie Roberts; musicians Ginger Baker, Dick Dale, João Gilberto, Mark Hollis, Daniel Johnston, Keith Flint, Eddie Money, Art Neville, Jessye Norman, Ric Ocasek, Mac "Dr John" Rebennack, and Leon Redbone; novelists Toni Morrison and Herman Wouk; poet Mary Oliver; politicians John Dingell and H. Ross Perot; restaurateur Leah Chase; and scientists Wally Broecker and Murray Gell-Mann.

2010s
<< 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 >>
Births - Deaths - Establishments - Events - Works